Tired of stalled projects, pushed deadlines, and “just following up on this” emails? We hear you. Here’s part 3 of our series to help you tackle silos and strengthen collaboration among cross-functional teams at your health system.
Summary
Nary a day goes by without “past due” tasks sitting at the top of a hospital marketer’s dashboard. Often, this is no fault of their own. Marketing workflows overlap with digital, creative, legal, and other teams. Even within the marketing department, one initiative might depend on many specialized teams working together.
This shared responsibility makes accountability squishy. Each team has their own priorities and timelines, and when someone misses a task, it creates a chain reaction that ultimately points a finger at marketing. Then leadership wonders, “Why do our marketing projects keep getting delayed?”
As a result, marketing leaders find themselves constantly chasing people for deadlines (or chasing people to chase people) and dealing with emergencies that derail their focus. But it doesn’t have to be this way.
It takes a range of skills to bring a hospital marketing project from idea to implementation. And the teams that own these skills are often siloed.
Silos are an org-wide challenge. Marketers can help identify silos and foster better collaboration — and we talk about this at length in the other parts of our Silo Wreckers series — but ultimately, you can’t fix your org’s silos alone. And you definitely can’t fix them overnight.
Fortunately, you don’t have to tear down all the silos to work more effectively with other teams. You just need to define ownership within your cross-functional marketing workflows to help collaboration flow more smoothly.
Hospital marketing projects are like doing a puzzle when you only have half the pieces. To finish the puzzle, you need the people holding the rest of the pieces. But they may not even realize they have what you need.
For example:
To finish puzzles faster — and with less chasing of the pieces — document your workflows and the roles within them. Let each team know which pieces they own and what contribution looks like.
You might hear “healthcare marketing governance” and think “red tape.” But this isn’t meant to add bureaucracy; it’s meant to be proactive and keep things moving with less back-and-forth.
Your workflow governance should define these roles at each touchpoint:
Some teams document roles and responsibilities using RACI charts (Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, and Informed). At Aha Media Group, we use swimlane diagrams to give healthcare marketing teams a model of how tasks change hands and loop around to specific team members.
Start by defining roles at key intersections where marketing depends on other departments and vice versa.
You don’t need to tackle each workflow at once. Ask your team members where the greatest bottlenecks happen and start there. For instance, the longest delays might be when content goes through legal or clinical review.
It’s essential to customize your workflows to your organization. Every hospital or health system is different — and a generic healthcare marketing workflow template likely won’t work for yours. Your marketing governance model needs to fit your:
Aha Media helps healthcare marketing teams identify and smooth out frustrating workflow bottlenecks. During our process, we:
Delays and dropped balls happen sometimes, but they shouldn’t be a daily reality. Productive cross-functional collaboration starts with defined roles, documented ownership, and clear expectations — and we’re here to help you fast-track the process of building them.
If you liked this article, check out part 1 and 2 of our 3-part Silo Wreckers series to help you tackle silos and strengthen collaboration among cross-functional teams at your health system.
Read part 1 about marketing & PX and part 2 about healthcare marketing’s role in recruitment.
Build the right governance to help your workflows actually work (so you can stop turning all the cranks).
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